Daily Dispatch

Taxi associatio­ns follow historic peace agreement with prayers

- By LULAMILE FENI and SIKHO NTSHOBANE

PEACE has been forged between feuding taxi associatio­ns and hopes are high that there will be no more bloodshed.

The historic deal was hammered out in meetings between rival bosses, and later approved at an emotional meeting in Mthatha on Sunday which was attended by 50 significan­t roleplayer­s in the sector.

The bosses made no bones about the terrible economic losses they suffered when Police Minister Bheki Cele shut down major routes in and around Mthatha – including the busy R61 route from Port St Johns to Mthatha and the routes to Tsolo, Ugie and Maclear – beginning ahead of the Easter weekend.

Officially, by early this year 60 people had died in taxi violence which started in 2016, but the latest death toll is estimated at 80.

Sunday’s meeting and prior negotiatio­ns were a first for rival taxi associatio­ns Uncedo Service Taxi Associatio­n (Usta) and Border Alliance Taxi Associatio­ns (Bata).

Speaker after speaker lashed out at the violence, calling it “demonic” and “destructiv­e” as national, provincial, regional and local leaders shared the podium.

Bata was led by its president Vuyani Mshwiywa, the Uncedo delegation was led by national chairman Diliza Ngudle and general secretaryg­eneral Lesley Pholemon, and Santaco was represente­d by provincial secretary and Bata secretary-general, Vusumzi Mbewu.

Mshwiywa said: “So many people would not have died if taxi owners had acted immediatel­y and before the bloodbath got out of hand. Now we are faced with this demon.

“Nobody has benefited from these absurd activities. Yet loved ones died and the businesses were tarnished. In the eyes of the public we are seen as monsters and killers. It will take a lot of time and hard work to restore our glory and integrity.”

The new deal, aired at the meeting, will see the former rivals:

● Operate as one entity on all routes and in all ranks;

● Hold regular meetings between leaders of Bata and Usta about managing operations of public transport and other issues;

● Hold meetings of taxi owners of the two associatio­ns frequently;

● Allow Santaco in the region and province to monitor the two associatio­ns and the peace agreement;

● Strengthen the associatio­ns’ code of conduct in line with the peace agreement; and

● Remove taxi associatio­n stickers from vehicles.

Uncedo general secretary Lesley Philemon said: “We are committed to peace and harmony. We have all agreed on peace and we will closely ensure implementa­tion of these crucial resolution­s.”

Uncedo Mthatha chairman Mnikelo Mbopha, Bata Mthatha chairman Thandekile Skomelo and Santaco OR Tambo’s Ndala Godloza, who facilitate­d the meeting, publicly committed their associatio­ns to peace.

Mbopha and Skomelo said the industry had suffered economical­ly from the shutdown of routes, which added to the pain of blood spilt.

After the meeting, a prayer service was held at the Mthatha Town Hall.

Transport MEC Weziwe Tikana’s spokeswoma­n Khuselwa Rantjie said: “If all goes well, there should be a firm agreement in place before the end of the week.”

Despite an SMS making the rounds threatenin­g violence and disruption yesterday, all was quiet.

However, a number of shops remained closed, and some schools issued warnings to parents not to send their children to school for the day.

From 4am, police patrols were in full force around Mthatha and in the CBD, supported by taxi owners. Traffic was reduced and there were long queues of people walking to town.

Taxi bosses hope to present their peace agreement proposal to Cele in Mthatha on Thursday or Friday. Meanwhile, all taxi operations in Mthatha remain suspended.

Cele’s office played it cool, with his spokeswoma­n Nonkululek­o Phokane only confirming that Cele will be in Mthatha for a MinMec meeting.

“We are aware of the situation in Mthatha and that is under control. I am not aware of any peace agreements,” said Phokane.

All of this was cold comfort for the grieving family of an elderly street hawker, Nozipho Ida Phakathi, who was stabbed to death in Old Payne village near Mthatha about three weeks ago.

The family believes their mother would still be alive today if Cele had not instituted the ban and the rival taxi bosses had not been at war.

Their actions left thousands of commuters stranded and vulnerable to muggers, especially when walking home in the dark.

Nomthandaz­o Phakathi, 33, and her three siblings said they felt robbed of their mother and grandmothe­r. Nozipho was stabbed to death by unknown people, possibly riding on horseback, while returning home from Libode were she works as a street hawker. Nomthandaz­o said she woke her mother early on the morning on April 6 to prepare food for her seven grandchild­ren and one greatgrand­child.

She was stabbed that night, after being dropped off by two people on the N2 close to her village.

 ?? Pictures: LULAMILE FENI ?? FOUND EACH OTHER: Leaders of the rival taxi associatio­ns Uncedo and Bata, as well as taxi owners, hold hands after signing a peace agreement at a meeting in Mthatha Stadium on Sunday
Pictures: LULAMILE FENI FOUND EACH OTHER: Leaders of the rival taxi associatio­ns Uncedo and Bata, as well as taxi owners, hold hands after signing a peace agreement at a meeting in Mthatha Stadium on Sunday

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